a selection from The
Voice of the Whaleman (1965)
by Stuart C. Sherman
Some years ago an antiquarian
book dealer visited the Providence Public Library while
on a tour of libraries
and bookshops.
After examining the special collections on Architecture,
Children’s
Books, Civil War and Slavery, Irish Culture, Printing and Whaling,
he said, ‘You have some of the finest collections, but
they are among the least known in this country!’ This
book, then, reflects the library’s policy to begin
telling the scholarly world about its resources.
The purpose of this book, at least initially, was to
provide a printed list of manuscript logbooks in the
Nicholson Whaling
Collection so as to stimulate their use by scholars. As
work on the manuscript progressed it became evident that
its usefulness
might be extended if its purpose was similarly expanded.
The supplementary lists of ‘Masters’, ‘Clearance
Dates’, ‘Ports’, ‘Keepers of Logbooks
and Journals’ and ‘Non-whaling Logbooks and Journals’ were,
therefore, added.
Manuscript whaling logbooks and journals have never been
described bibliographically, nor has there been any
attempt to classify
or describe the commercial, consulate and customs records
relating to the whaling industry. This is, therefore,
the first attempt
to bring a semblance of order to a field heretofore uncharted.
I make no pretense of having described all the records relating
to the industry, but only those, which are present in the
Nicholson Collection and may be found in other collections.
With the exception
of United States Consular Correspondence in the National
Archives, these records, which have survived, is known
to all who work
in this field. Clifford W. Ashley estimated in 1926 that
perhaps one logbook in ten had escaped the rubbish
heap. He later revised
his estimate to one in fifty, which we now know to be a gross
exaggeration.
From the information gathered by Alexander Starbuck and
Reginald B. Hegarty 13,927 voyages are known to exist,
or about one-fourth
of the known voyages. If limited to official logbooks, the
proportion would more nearly approximate Ashley’s first
estimate.
The Nicholson Collection contains one-fourth of the logbooks
and journals known to exist, but only six per cent of the
voyages known to have been made. With concerted effort other
records
will come to light but it is doubtful if thirty per cent
of the logbooks and private journals relating to this great
industry
have survived.
It is a tragedy that the descendants of whalemen have insisted
on retaining these records within their families for this
has accounted for untold losses by fire, paper salvage
drives, attic
cleaning projects and their use as scrapbooks. Individuals
possessing such records are strongly urged to give
or deposit them in libraries
or museums which are fireproof, air conditioned and accessible
to scholars at all times. There is a tax advantage to such
a step and photo copies may be secured for retention
by donors.
This book has another purpose, which is to serve as the
beginning of a world census of logbooks and journals
of American whaling
vessels. Work on this inventory will be amplified so as to
include the holdings of other institutions and private
collections.
It is hoped that the ‘voice of the whaleman’ recorded
here can be offered some day as a collection of original narratives.An
account of the Nicholson Whaling Collection
In 1920 Paul C. Nicholson, Providence industrialist, wrote
to Colonel George Shepley, a noted collector of Rhode Islandiana.
In thanking him for a copy of The Loss of the Lexington,
he added: ‘Howard
[Chapin] has probably told you that I am starting to get material
for a small nautical library’. Two weeks later he sent
orders to three booksellers for books which may have constituted
the beginnings of the collection. It is probably more than coincidental
that among them there was an order for History of the American
Whale Fishery by Alexander Starbuck. This purchase revealed his
awareness that Starbuck was the ‘No. 1 book for anyone
interested in this subject’. It was later carefully bound
in brown pigskin with the words MY TEXT BOOK stamped in gold
on the spine. When Starbuck was purchased it is doubtful that
Mr. Nicholson could visualize the scope of the collection which
he was to build and, in 1956, bequeath to the Providence Public
Library.
In a very few months he established himself among booksellers
and auction houses as a collector with a wide range of nautical
interests. His early orders were for books on privateering,
bucaneering, pirates, whaling, shipwrecks, naval subjects,
voyages and travel,
South Seas, seamanship, Rhode Island history, Melville and
ship models. Any one of these might have furnished
a suitable subject
for a collection.
It is not known precisely when he conceived the idea of
building his great whaling collection. Such decisions
usually evolve slowly.
It is possible, however, to speculate that certain events
over a period of several years had a catalytic effect
on its eventual
design.
In 1921 Raymond M. Weaver published the first biography
of Herman Melville and thereby stimulated recognition
of Melville
and a
revival of interest in Moby Dick. A year later the Whaling
Film Corporation released the motion picture ‘Down To The Sea
In Ships’ which captured the interest of New Englanders
who were observers of the dying whaling industry. Other events
which could not have escaped Mr. Nicholson’s notice were
the wreck of the last square-rigged whaling vessel Wanderer on
Cuttyhunk Island during an August ‘blow’ in 1924,
the return of the schooner Margarett from a short whaling voyage
in the Atlantic on the previous day, the conversion of the Charles
W. Morgan into a ‘monument to a dead industry’ and
the publication of Clifford W. Ashley’s famous book The
Yankee Whaler in 1926.
He may have been influenced to narrow his collecting by the
mere availability of manuscript logbooks, which came to his
attention
in increasing numbers. He had virtually no competition to
gather the records of a vanished industry.
In 1932 he stated in a letter to a dealer that he was interested
only in manuscript logbooks of whaling voyages. Three years
later he was ‘getting to the point where he must specialize’.
Such statements continued in his letters to dealers. ‘I
have no place for whaling paintings’, or ‘I am
afraid I have to concentrate entirely on whaling, and even
then will
have to do something to get more room for my logs.’
In the process of collecting, Mr. Nicholson adopted principles
that guided his selection of logbooks and account books.
He never bought logbooks without seeing them and had ‘absolutely
no room for anything except complete logs’. He rarely
visited bookstores or antique shops, but requested that material
be sent
to him on approval, priced by the dealer.
He adhered strictly to what he considered a fair price formula;
as a result of which he set, to a certain degree, the going
price on logbooks. This he could virtually do as the leading
collector.
In a letter to a dealer on July 16, 1942, he stated: ‘An
ordinary log of a four year trip is worth approximately $25 to
which one might add $5 if there are a quantity of whale stamps,
and perhaps $5 for color. Two year logs are worth from $15 to
$20 depending on their interest and condition.’ He seldom,
if ever, wavered from these guides.
Frequently he would be advised by auction houses that his
bids were low but he never revised them. The bids were
submitted on
the basis of his experience in buying. If the prices exceeded
his figures the logbooks were declined. On more than one
occasion he was known to have refused those which seemed
overpriced, though
desirable. But the dealers, aware of other channels, often
sold the logbooks to his mother, who presented them
to him on special
occasions.
By 1946 his collection had grown to a figure in excess
of 400 logbooks and he had to take further steps to
make room. By writing
to several dealers he began to prune non-whaling material
in order to provide additional space, despite the fact
that the
huge library in his home had deep shelves from floor to ceiling
on parts of four walls.
Mr. Nicholson was not a collector just for the sake of
acquisition. His intimate knowledge of the contents
of his manuscripts is
revealed in the catalog which he maintained. Every logbook,
journal, account book and outfitting book was carefully recorded
on cards
and filed by vessel. That he read his manuscripts is revealed
in the detailed notations on the cards, with the date of
unusual incidents, for example: ‘2 men a fiting [sic]. Called them
aft and tied them together’; ‘Capt’s wife gave
birth to a 10 lb. Son –Capt. Quite sick’; ‘Cooper
employed killing bedbugs’; or ‘Body of captain brought
back in brine’.
Mr. Nicholson was fully aware of the significance of his
collection to the world of scholarship and in his quiet,
reserved manner
was most generous to those who sought his aid. Librarians,
whaling and naval historians, students of Melville, an Arctic
explorer
(Vilhjalmur Stefansson), American governmental agencies,
archival departments of foreign governments and many institutions
found
him receptive to their queries. The name of Paul C. Nicholson
appears in the acknowledgments of numerous marine books published
during the last twenty years and they are better books because
of his generosity in permitting writers to use his collection.
Many logbooks acquired by Mr. Nicholson had been used as
scrapbooks by wives and children of whaling masters.
In them he found
letters, poems, recipes and the latest styles clipped from
the newspaper
or a ladies’ magazine. He developed a method of spraying
steam generated by a portable boiler onto the pages of the
logbook. The pasted items could then be peeled off without
harming either
paper or ink, thus salvaging the records of another voyage.
Mr. Nicholson’s own contribution to the literature of whaling
was the publication of Abstracts from a Journal Kept Aboard the
Ship Sharon of Fairhaven on a Whaling Voyage in the South Pacific,
1841-1845. It was privately printed by Rosalind and Paul Nicholson
in 1953 in an edition of 250 copies. The book is an edited version
of the cooper’s journal which related the account of the
bloody mutiny during which the third mate, Benjamin Clough, a
young man of twenty-one, re-took the ship. A microfilm copy of
Clough’s own journal is available in the collection through
the courtesy of his grandson, Professor Benjamin C. Clough.
Spanning the period from 1762 to 1922, the collection, including
recent additions, now consists of 836 manuscript logbooks,
journals and account books. The earliest item is a journal
of the sloop
Sandwich (698) of Nantucket, and the most recent is the logbook
of the schooner Gaspe (302) of Gloucester. The latter voyage
was made to the West Indies for the purpose of filming parts
of the motion picture ‘Down To The Sea In Ships’.
There are numerous groups of correspondence including 104 letters
from Samuel Rodman of New Bedford to William Logan Fisher of
Philadelphia concerning the whale oil business between 1809
and 1829. Thousands of business records involved in the outfitting
of vessels, the sale of oil and the settlement of voyages are
stored in thirteen sea chests. Together with the logbooks or
journals, a complete economic and narrative record for certain
voyages could, thus, be written.
Also available are nearly 3,000 marine insurance policies
containing measurements and construction details of
whaling vessels; photographic
prints and negatives of whaling vessels and scrimshaw; three
boat models in whalebone, including an excellent scale model
of a whaleboat with all the fittings; and scarce wooden stamps
carved by whalemen in the form of whales and ships which
were used to record ships sighted and whales sighted
or captured.
There is a small collection of printed books and pamphlets
which include such rarities as the Owen Chase narrative of
the sinking
of the Essex by a whale; the account of the Globe mutiny;
sea letters, shipping lists, crew lists, outfitting
books, New
Bedford directories, signal books, almanacs and Ship Registers.
Files
of newspapers valuable for marine intelligence include The
Whalemen’s
Shipping List, The Friend, The Polynesian and The Sandwich
Island Gazette. In all, nearly 15,000 items make up this rich
collection.
Its size and scope is noteworthy in that it resulted chiefly
from the collection efforts of one man.
What was there about these logbooks that provided the fascination
of the chase to the collector? Musty, space consuming, often
phonetically spelled and illegible, they offered none of
the factors that book collectors cherish in gilt-edge areas
of
collecting. Even to the dry-land whaleman in the security
of a steady armchair,
reading logbooks can be a tedious experience often comparable
to that of reading a dictionary. There are plenty of characters
but they are not developed. There is little, if any, plot
and the only rising and falling action is in the constant
motion
of the vessel. No words were wasted in eh tedious recording
of wind, weather and whales nor in citing other less routine
events
of the voyage, for example: ‘Sighted whales. Loard [sic]
boats. Took 1’; or ‘Cook sick, goes over side.
Nothing seen but his cap.’
Hardship and disaster, monotony and homesickness were only
occasionally relieved by a gam with another vessel or liberty
on a Pacific
Island. But the determined reader will find in these pages
all the ills that sailors fall heir to – enough material
to stir the imagination of writers for years to come. There
are
accounts of castaways, mutinies, desertions, floggings, women
stowaways, drunkenness, illicit shore leave experiences, scurvy,
fever, collisions, fire at sea, stove boats, drownings, hurricanes,
earthquakes, tidal waves, shipwrecks, ships struck by lightinning,
men falling from the masthead, hostile natives, barratry, brutal
skippers, escape from Confederate raiders, hard luck voyages
and ships crushed by ice.
A fuller indexing of the information stored in the Nicholson
Whaling Collection would reveal a geographic list of places
visited by whalemen; a list of unusual occurrences, such
as descriptions
of storms, atmospheric and astronomical phenomena; accounts
of winds and temperature of air and water; tide, current,
reef and
ice conditions; times of the year when the Arctic Ocean can
be entered via Bering Strait; wintering-in conditions at
Herschel
Island and other locations; records of the locations of whales
at different times of the year; observations on the fauna
and flora; soundings and discoveries of unchartered rocks,
reefs
and islands; illustrations of ships, whales, landfalls and
house flags; names of wives and children who accompanied
captains;
the effect of the Civil War on whaling; lists of vessels
gammed or sighted; lists of deserters; and original poetry
and whaling
ballads. These manuscripts will also yield information of
historical, scientific, geographical, genealogical and anthropological
value.
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